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Appeal from a judgment of the Court of First Instance of Manila, Hon. Conrado M.
Vasquez, presiding, sentencing the defendants to pay the plaintiff the sum of P600,
with legal interest from September 10, 1953 until paid, and to pay the costs.
The action is for the recovery of the value of a check for P600 payable to the plaintiff and
drawn by defendant Anita C. Gatchalian. The complaint sets forth the check and alleges
that plaintiff received it in payment of the indebtedness of one Matilde Gonzales; that upon
receipt of said check, plaintiff gave Matilde Gonzales P158.25, the difference between the
face value of the check and Matilde Gonzales' indebtedness. The defendants admit the
execution of the check but they allege in their answer, as affirmative defense, that it was
issued subject to a condition, which was not fulfilled, and that plaintiff was guilty of gross
negligence in not taking steps to protect itself.
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At the time of the trial, the parties submitted a stipulation of facts, which reads as follows:
"Plaintiff and defendants through their respective undersigned
attorney's respectfully submit the following Agreed Stipulation of Facts;
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No other evidence was submitted and upon said stipulation the court rendered the
judgment already alluded to above.
In their appeal defendants-appellants contend that the check is not a negotiable
instrument, under the facts and circumstances stated in the stipulation of facts, and that
plaintiff is not a holder in due course. In support of the first contention, it is argued that
defendant Gatchalian had no intention to transfer her property in the instrument as it was
for safekeeping merely and, therefore, there was no delivery required by law (Section 16,
Negotiable Instruments Law); that assuming for the sake of argument that delivery was
not for safekeeping merely, the delivery was conditional and the condition was not fulfilled.
In support of the contention that plaintiff-appellee is not a holder in due course, the
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appellant argues that plaintiff-appellee cannot be a holder in due course because there
was no negotiation prior to plaintiff-appellee's acquiring the possession of the check; that
a holder in due course presupposes a prior party from whose hands negotiation
proceeded, and in the case at bar, plaintiff-appellee is the payee, the maker and the payee
being original parties. It is also claimed that the plaintiff-appellee is not a holder in due
course because it acquired the check with notice of defect in the title of the holder, Manuel
Gonzales, and because under the circumstances stated in the stipulation of facts there
were circumstances that brought suspicion about Gonzales' possession and negotiation,
which circumstances should have placed the plaintiff-appellee under the duty to inquire
into the title of the holder. The circumstances are as follows:
"The check is not a personal check of Manuel Gonzales. (Paragraph
Ninth, Stipulation of Facts). Plaintiff could have inquired why a person
would use the check of another to pay his own debt. Furthermore, plaintiff
had the 'means of knowledge' inasmuch as defendant Hipolito Gatchalian is
personally acquainted with V. R. de Ocampo (Paragraph Sixth, Stipulation of
Facts.)
Answering the first contention of appellant, counsel for plaintiff-appellee argues that in
accordance with the best authority on the Negotiable Instruments Law, plaintiff-appellee
may be considered as a holder in due course, citing Brannan's Negotiable Instruments Law,
6th edition, page 252. On this issue Brannan holds that a payee may be a holder in due
course and says that to this effect is the greater weight of authority, thus:
"Whether the payee may be a holder in due course under the N. I. L.,
as he was at common law, is a question upon which the courts are in
serious conflict. There can be no doubt that a proper interpretation of the act
read as a whole leads to the conclusion that a payee may be a holder in due
course under any circumstance in which he meets the requirements of Sec.
52.
"The argument of Professor Brannan in an earlier edition of this work
has never been successfully answered and is here repeated
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The first argument of the defendants-appellants, therefore, depends upon whether or not
the plaintiff-appellee is a holder in due course. If it is such a holder in due course, it is
immaterial that it was the payee and an immediate party to the instrument.
The other contention of the plaintiff is that there has been no negotiation of the instrument,
because the drawer did not deliver the instrument to Manuel Gonzales with the intention of
negotiating the same, or for the purpose of giving effect thereto, for as the stipulation of
facts declares the check was to remain in the possession of Manuel Gonzales, and was
not to be negotiated, but was to serve merely as evidence of good faith of defendants in
their desire to purchase the car being sold to them. Admitting that such was the intention
of the drawer of the check when she delivered it to Manuel Gonzales, it was no fault of the
plaintiff-appellee drawee if Manuel Gonzales delivered the check or negotiated it. As the
check was payable to the plaintiff-appellee, and was entrusted to Manuel Gonzales by
Gatchalian, the delivery to Manuel Gonzales was a delivery by the drawer to his own agent;
in other words, Manuel Gonzales was the agent of the drawer Anita Gatchalian insofar as
the possession of the check is concerned. So, when the agent of drawer Manuel Gonzales
negotiated the check with the intention of getting its value from plaintiff- appellee,
negotiation took place through no fault of the plaintiff- appellee, unless it can be shown
that the plaintiff-appellee should be considered as having notice of the defect in the
possession of the holder Manuel Gonzales. Our resolution of this issue leads us to a
consideration of the last question presented by the appellants, i.e., whether the plaintiffappellee may be considered as a holder in due course.
Section 52, Negotiable Instruments Law, defines holder in due course, thus:
"A holder in due course is a holder who has taken the instrument
under the following conditions:
(a)
(b)
That he became the holder of it before it was overdue, and
without notice that it had been previously dishonored, if such was the fact;
(c)
(d)
That at the time it was negotiated to him he had no notice of
any infirmity in the instrument or defect in the title of the person negotiating
it."
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The stipulation of facts expressly states that plaintiff-appellee was not aware of the
circumstances under which the check was delivered to Manuel Gonzales, but we agree
with the defendants-appellants that the circumstances indicated by them in their briefs,
such as the fact that appellants had no obligation or liability to the Ocampo Clinic; that the
amount of the check did not correspond exactly with the obligation of Matilde Gonzales to
Dr. V. R. de Ocampo; and that the check had two parallel lines in the upper left hand corner,
which practice means that the check could only be deposited but may not be converted
into cash all these circumstances should have put the plaintiff-appellee to inquiry as to
the why and wherefore of the possession of the check by Manuel Gonzales, and why he
used it to pay Matilde's account. It was payee's duty to ascertain from the holder Manuel
Gonzales what the nature of the latter's title to the check was or the nature of his
possession. Having failed in this respect, we must declare that plaintiff-appellee was guilty
of gross neglect in not finding out the nature of the title and possession of Manuel
Gonzales, amounting to legal absence of good faith, and it may not be considered as a
holder of the check in good faith, to such effect is the consensus of authority.
"In order to show that the defendant had 'knowledge of such facts
that his action in taking the instrument amounted to bad faith,' it is not
necessary to prove that the defendant knew the exact fraud that was
practiced upon the plaintiff by the defendant's assignor, it being sufficient to
show that the defendant had notice that there was something wrong about
his assignor's acquisition of title, although he did not have notice of the
particular wrong that was committed. Paika v. Perry, 225 Mass. 563, 114 N.
E. 830.
"It is sufficient that the buyer of a note had notice or knowledge that
the note was in some way tainted with fraud. It is not necessary that he
should know the particulars or even the nature of the fraud, since all that is
required is knowledge of such facts that his action in taking the note
amounted to bad faith. Ozark Motor Co. v. Horton (Mo. App.), 196 S. W. 395.
Accord. Davis v. First Nat. Bank, 26 Ariz. 621, 229 Pac. 391.
"Liberty bonds stolen from the plaintiff were brought by the thief, a
boy fifteen years old, less than five feet tall, immature in appearance and
bearing on his face the stamp of a degenerate, to the defendants' clerk for
sale. The boy stated that they belonged to his mother. The defendants paid
the boy for the bonds without any further inquiry. Held, the plaintiff could
recover the value of the bonds. The term 'bad faith' does not necessarily
involve furtive motives but means bad faith in a commercial sense. The
manner in which the defendants conducted their Liberty Loan department
provided an easy way for thieves to dispose of their plunder. It was a case of
'no questions asked' Although gross negligence does not of itself constitute
bad faith, it is evidence from which bad faith may be inferred. The
circumstances thrust the duty upon the defendants to make further inquiries
and they had no right to shut their eyes deliberately to obvious facts. Morris
v. Muir, 111 Misc. Rep. 739, 181 N. Y. Supp. 913, affd. in memo., 191 App.
Div. 947, 181 N. Y. Supp. 945." (pp. 640-642, Brannan's Negotiable
Instruments Law, 6th ed.).
The above considerations would seem sufficient to justify our ruling that plaintiff-appellee
should not be allowed to recover the value of the check. Let us now examine the express
provisions of the Negotiable Instruments Law pertinent to the matter to find if our ruling
conforms thereto. Section 52 (c) provides that a holder in due course is one who takes the
instrument "in good faith and for value;" Section 59, "that every holder is deemed prima
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facie to be a holder in due course;" and Section 52 (d), that in order that one may be a
holder in due course it is necessary that "at the time the instrument was negotiated to him
"he had no notice of any . . . defect in the title of the person negotiating it;" and lastly
Section 59, that every holder is deemed prima facie to be a holder in due course.
In the case at bar the rule that a possessor of the instrument is prima facie a holder in due
course does not apply because there was a defect in the title of the holder (Manuel
Gonzales), because the instrument is not payable to him or to bearer. On the other hand,
the stipulation of facts indicated by the appellants in their brief, like the fact that the
drawer had no account with the payee; that the holder did not show or tell the payee why
he had the check in his possession and why he was using it for the payment of his own
personal account show that holder's title was defective or suspicious, to say the least.
As holder's title was defective or suspicious, it cannot be stated that the payee acquired
the check without knowledge of said defect in holder's title, and for this reason the
presumption that it is a holder in due course or that it acquired the instrument in good faith
does not exist. And having presented no evidence that it acquired the check in good faith, it
(payee) cannot be considered as a holder in due course. In other words, under the
circumstances of the case, instead of the presumption that payee was a holder in good
faith, the fact is that it acquired possession of the instrument under circumstances that
should have put it to inquiry as to the title of the holder who negotiated the check to it. The
burden was, therefore, placed upon it to show that notwithstanding the suspicious
circumstances, it acquired the check in actual good faith.
The rule applicable to the case at bar is that describe in the case of Howard National Bank
v. Wilson, et al., 96 Vt. 438, 120 At. 889, 894, where the Supreme Court of Vermont made
the following disquisition:
"Prior to the Negotiable Instruments Act, two distinct lines of cases
had developed in this country. The first had its origin in Gill v. Cubitt, 3 B. &
C. 466, 10 E. L. 21b, where the rule was distinctly laid down by the court of
King's Bench that the purchaser of negotiable paper must exercise
reasonable prudence and caution, and that, if the circumstances were such
as ought to have excited the suspicion of a prudent and careful man, and he
made no inquiry, he did not stand in the legal position of a bona fide holder.
The rule was adopted by the courts of this country generally and seem to
have become a fixed rule in the law of negotiable paper. Later in Goodman
v. Harvey, 4 A. & E. 870 31 E. C. L. 381, the English court abandoned its
former position and adopted the rule that nothing short of actual bad faith
or fraud in the purchaser would deprive him of the character of a bona fide
purchaser and let in defenses existing between prior parties, that no
circumstances of suspicion merely, or want of proper caution in the
purchaser, would have this effect, and that even gross negligence would
have no effect, except as evidence tending to establish bad faith or fraud.
Some of the American courts adhered to the earlier rule, while others
followed the change inaugurated in Goodman vs. Harvey. The question was
before this court in Roth vs. Colvin, 32 Vt. 125, and, on full consideration of
the question, a rule was adopted in harmony with that announced in Gill vs.
Cubitt, which has been adhered to in subsequent cases, including those cited
above. Stated briefly, one line of cases including our own had adopted the
test of the reasonably prudent man and the other that of actual good faith. It
would seem that it was the intent of the Negotiable Instruments Act to
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harmonize this disagreement by adopting the latter test. That such is the
view generally accepted by the courts appears from a recent review of the
cases concerning what constitutes notice of defect. Brannan on Neg. Ins.
Law, 187-201. To effectuate the general purpose of the act to make uniform
the Negotiable Instruments Law of those states which should enact it, we
are constrained to hold (contrary to the rule adopted in our former decisions)
that negligence on the part of the plaintiff, or suspicious circumstances
sufficient to put a prudent man on inquiry, will not of themselves prevent a
recovery, but are to be considered merely as evidence bearing on the
question of bad faith. See G. L. 3113, 3172, where such a course is required
in construing other uniform acts.
"It comes to this then: When the case has taken such shape that the
plaintiff is called upon to prove himself a holder in due course to be entitled
to recover, he is required to establish the conditions entitling him to standing
as such, including good faith in taking the instrument. It devolves upon him
to disclose the facts and circumstances attending the transfer, from which
good or bad faith in the transaction may be inferred."
In the case at bar as the payee acquired the check under circumstances which should have
put it to inquiry, why the holder had the check and used it to pay his own personal account,
the duty devolved upon it, plaintiff-appellee, to prove that it actually acquired said check in
good faith. The stipulation of facts contains no statement of such good faith, hence we are
forced to the conclusion that plaintiff payee has not proved that it acquired the check in
good faith and may not be deemed a holder in due course thereof.
For the foregoing considerations, the decision appealed from should be, as it is hereby,
reversed, and the defendants are absolved from the complaint. With costs against
plaintiff-appellee.
Padilla, Bautista Angelo, Concepcion, Reyes, J.B.L., Barrera, Paredes, Dizon and De Leon,
JJ., concur.
Bengzon, C.J., concurs in the result.
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